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Chris Higgins
Parsing the Red and Blue Map
by Chris Higgins - November 6, 2008 - 3:01 PM

Physics professor Mark Newman has a thing for maps. He co-authored The Atlas of the Real World, a volume that features cartograms, maps in which a mathematical variable is substituted for land area. This causes traditional land-based maps to skew and distort in bizarre ways, hopefully communicating important information to the viewer — information that goes beyond what you can see when just looking at land area.

Newman’s cartograms of the 2008 election map have been making the rounds of the web, and I highly recommend a look at them. It’s a quick read, and is a great introduction to how the process of cartogramography can change how we think about maps. Below are two sample illustrations from Newman’s page.

Traditional red state/blue state map, 2008 election edition:

Red states, blue states

Cartogram redrawing the map with states proportional to their populations:

Cartogram of red states and blue states by population

…But that’s hardly the end of the story — no state is entirely red or entirely blue. Check out Newman’s cartograms for further analysis of how to look in detail at electoral mapping, to get a better view of the US election. (Hint: it’s not about red or blue, it’s about purple.)

Comments (6)
  1. Very cool… the last one on his page looks like a melted-crayon map of the US.

  2. HAHA new jersey and california are fatties

  3. That’s not very useful. You should see the 3D ones elevated for regional populations. They produce a much different picture.

  4. The manipulations of the maps can be altered to show whatever point you wish to display.

    However, when it comes to the original intended purpose, the first one is the only one that matters.

  5. Re: Victoria’s comment, I totally LOLed. Fat maps are funny.

  6. WHOA. The red is so bright on my monitor it looks as if it were pulsing! Optical illusions, gotta love ‘em.

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